People power wins: super trawler banned

In a huge victory against the plunder of our oceans, the Australian Federal Environment Minister Tony Burke has announced new laws that will ban the Margiris super trawler, now known as the Abel Tasman, from operating in Australian waters for up to two years.

Congratulations must go to the thousands of passionate Australians, community and environmental organisations and fishing groups who have stopped the Margiris from destroying Australia‘s oceans.

Burke's announcement means the super trawler will be banned for up to two years. Further scientific investigations will also be needed before ships like this can be approved.

This is what Greenpeace Australia was calling for and we congratulate the Australian government on listening to the community and taking action.

Minister Burke acknowledged the opposition to the super trawler when making his announcement, commenting: “There has been no doubt there has been a massive public focus on this.”

It was the united action of community members, environmentalists and fishing groups that convinced the government to protect Australia’s fish stocks, marine wildlife and fishing communities.

This victory is testimony to the power of collective will and the importance of standing up for what’s right.

Because of the donations received from Greenpeace supporters, we were able to:

Highlight the dangerous flaws in the approval process and the threat to Australia’s fishing communities, fish stocks and marine ecosystems.

Track the route of the Margiris, raise awareness of its pending arrival and take direct action as it hit Australian waters.

Unite with a unique coalition of groups to mobilise diverse communities, hold rallies and pressure the government.

This is a significant setback for the European super trawler fleet, but the campaign against destructive fishing needs to continue.

The Margiris is just one fishing vessel that is impacting marine ecosystems globally. The global fishing fleet is catching more fish than nature can sustain. In our region, the Pacific faces the threat of over-sized foreign vessels every day.

Hold your horses!!! They haven't voted on it yet - the opposition is opposing it, and the balance-of-power independents are prevaricating, and so they should - it is a rush job, and they might be able to do a bit of bargaining on it. I just hope it gets through, we don't want this monster here!!! Super trawlers have cleaned out all the fisheries in the world, and now they are here to carpet-bag our seas, the last oceans with any fish in them (in viable quantities). Note: We should ALL be leaving the poor bloody fish alone.
To add insult to injury, after cleaning out West African fisheries, the owners of the super trawler have the absolute gall to say that Africa needs our fish because they don't have enough, as if the Margiris/Abel Tasman has a humanitarian purpose!!!
The Dutch super trawler owners/directors of "Seafish Tasmania" and Gerry Geen, the token Aussie director, win the prize for sheer bare-faced effrontery.
My opinions, of course.

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(Unregistered) htstw112
says:

The funny thing is, the Margiris used to be an ocean incinerator vessel, called the Apollo II before it was converted to a trawler. Greenpeace protest...

The funny thing is, the Margiris used to be an ocean incinerator vessel, called the Apollo II before it was converted to a trawler. Greenpeace protested against such ships back in the 80s. It hasn't done the environment much good in its lifetime, it would appear.